Dependent States in 1993

Pacific

It was a bad year for incumbent political leaders in U.S. territories. One-term governor Larry Guerrero of the Northern Marianas lost his reelection bid in November 1993. He was defeated by his predecessor in office, Froilan C. Tenorio. Guerrero followed in the path of Peter Tali Coleman, American Samoa’s governor for 11 of the previous 15 years, who was defeated at the polls in November 1992. Coleman was succeeded by Sen. A.P. Lutali, who had previously served as governor (1985-89). Lutali accused Coleman of continuing to hire and promote staff after the election and of making advance payments for services to political appointees. Within months Lutali had addressed the territory’s financial crisis by dismissing 20% of all government workers, most of them Coleman appointees hired on a temporary basis or on contract.

Pres. Ngiratkel Etpison of Palau (Belau) also lost reelection, to former vice president Kuniwo Nakamura. At the same time, 14 of Palau’s 16 states voted for a constitutional change that opened the way for the controversial antinuclear constitution to be amended by simple majority and, as a consequence, for Palau to negotiate with the U.S. on a Compact of Free Association. In seven previous plebiscites 62-73% of voters had supported change, just short of the 75% previously required by the constitution.

In March, Frank Lui, a former Cabinet minister and a member of the Niue legislature since 1970, was named to succeed Young Vivian as prime minister. Vivian had held the post since the death of Sir Robert Rex, Niue’s long-serving premier, in December 1992. Lui announced that his government would try to persuade Niueans to return home. About 12,000 Niueans lived in New Zealand, compared with some 2,400 living on Niue. In October the Cook Islands served as host for the South Pacific Festival of Arts. However, the festival, and especially the $NZ 11.6 million cultural centre built for it, gave the government a deficit of $NZ 6 million, its largest in 20 years.

The economy of French Polynesia was adversely affected by France’s decision to join the international moratorium on nuclear testing; some 10,000 jobs and 20% of the territory’s revenue were directly related to the testing program. The French government agreed to provide financial assistance to ease the loss. In December 1992 the Court of Appeal in Paris had upheld minor corruption charges against Gaston Flosse, a prominent local politician and former minister in the French government, and Jean Juventin, president of the Territorial Assembly. In March 1993, Flosse was elected to the French National Assembly as one of the territory’s two representatives.

In New Caledonia, progress was reviewed on the implementation of the Matignon accords, under which a major development program would be followed by a referendum on the territory’s political future in 1998. To some extent the process was soured by a controversy over the purchase by the Kanak-controlled Northern Province of major tourist assets in the south, the chief area of European settlement.

East Asia

The standoff between the U.K. and China over Gov. Chris Patten’s proposals for expanding democracy dominated political life in British-run Hong Kong in 1993. Patten had proposed widening the franchise in the 1995 elections for the Legislative Council’s 60 seats, only 20 of which were to be directly elected. The councillors’ terms were supposed to last until 1999, two years after the 1997 return of sovereignty to China. Beijing (Peking) steadfastly denounced the proposals, insisting that they ran counter to the 1984 Sino-British Joint Declaration, the post-1997 Basic Law for the territory, and an earlier exchange of letters on electoral arrangements. Officials refused to hold talks with the British unless the proposals were dropped, and they threatened to set up a parallel political structure to prepare for the transition.

In late March the Hong Kong government officially gazetted, or published, the proposals as a bill, setting the stage for a potential debate and vote in the Legislative Council. Shortly afterward China agreed to hold talks, but the negotiations dragged on for round after round with no visible progress. Public statements on both sides became more acrimonious. In October, Patten revealed that the British side had offered concessions that would greatly reduce the eligible electorate for the 40 non-directly elected seats, but China maintained its position. In December, Patten made good on earlier promises and introduced legislation on electoral reform. Beijing immediately broke off talks and declared an end to cooperation with the U.K.

Despite the political tension, the territory’s economy continued to grow at a robust rate of 5%. The stock market became feverish in October, breaking records on a daily basis after the U.S. investment house Morgan Stanley gave it a highly bullish rating owing to China’s growth prospects, and foreign money flooded in. In neighbouring Macau, which was due to be returned to China in 1999, boomtown-style development continued as gambling tycoon Stanley Ho gained Beijing’s approval for a $1.4 billion land-reclamation project, set to expand Macau’s mainland territory by 20%.

Click anywhere inside the article to add text or insert superscripts, subscripts, and special characters.
You can also highlight a section and use the tools in this bar to modify existing content:

Add links to related Britannica articles!
You can double-click any word or highlight a word or phrase in the text below and then select an article from the search box.
Or, simply highlight a word or phrase in the article, then enter the article name or term you'd like to link to in the search box below, and select from the list of results.

Note: we do not allow links to external resources in editor.
Please click the Web sites link for this article to add citations for
external Web sites.